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Dec 22, 2024

How A.I. Could Change Science Forever

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI, science

It’s getting harder to harder to ignore the potential disruptive power of AI in research. Scientists are already using AI tools but could the future lead to complete replacement of humans? How will our scientific institutions transform? These are difficult questions but ones we have to talk about in today’s episode.

Written, presented \& edited by Prof. David Kipping.

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Dec 22, 2024

The Next Great Leap In AI Is Behind Schedule And Crazy Expensive

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

OpenAI has run into problem after problem on its new artificial-intelligence project, code-named Orion.

Dec 22, 2024

AI as Humanity’s Salieri: Quantifying Linguistic Creativity of Language Models via Systematic Attribution of Machine Text against Web Text. AI as Huma

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Creativity has long been considered one of the most difficult aspect of human intelligence for AI to mimic. However, the rise of Large Language Models (LLMs), like ChatGPT, has raised questions about whether AI can match or even surpass human creativity.

Dec 22, 2024

Imaging-guided bioresorbable acoustic hydrogel microrobots

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, materials

Scientists have developed imaging-guided, biodegradable microrobots that can be propelled acoustically or magnetically through tissues for targeted drug delivery and enhanced ultrasound imaging contrast.

Dec 22, 2024

Season 5, Episode 31: Meet a Webb Scientist Who Looks Back in Time

Posted by in category: space

Thirty-five years ago, our Cosmic Background Explorer, or COBE, was launched! The satellite was a crucial stepping stone in understanding the cosmic microwave background — the afterglow of the earliest moments of our universe.

Launched from what’s now Vandenberg Space Force Base on Nov. 18, 1989, COBE carried three instruments to space to measure microwave and infrared light across the whole sky. COBE’s observations helped us learn how our universe started and evolved.

Continue reading “Season 5, Episode 31: Meet a Webb Scientist Who Looks Back in Time” »

Dec 22, 2024

Quantum Information and Quest for Infinities — Vector Spaces

Posted by in categories: mapping, mathematics, quantum physics

The concept of vectors can be traced back to the 17th century with the development of analytic geometry by René Descartes and Pierre de Fermat. They used coordinates to represent points in a plane, which can be seen as a precursor to vectors. In the early 19th century, mathematicians like Bernard Bolzano and August Ferdinand Möbius began to formalize operations on points, lines, and planes, which further developed the idea of vectors.

Hermann Grassmann is considered one of the key figures in the development of vector spaces. In his 1844 work “Die lineale Ausdehnungslehre” (The Theory of Linear Extension), he introduced concepts that are central to vector spaces, such as linear independence, dimension, and scalar products. However, his work was not widely recognized at the time.

In 1888, Giuseppe Peano gave the first modern axiomatic definition of vector spaces. He called them “linear systems” and provided a set of axioms that precisely defined the properties of vector spaces and linear maps. Hilbert helped to further formalize and abstract the concept of vector spaces, placing it within a broader axiomatic framework for mathematics. He played a key role in the development of functional analysis, which studies infinite-dimensional vector spaces.

Dec 22, 2024

Naming the Stars Is Surprisingly Difficult

Posted by in category: space

With billions of stars in the Milky Way, some nomenclature standardization is necessary.

By Phil Plait edited by Lee Billings.

Dec 22, 2024

Up to 13% of Dementia Cases Could Be a Misdiagnosed Treatable Condition

Posted by in categories: health, neuroscience

As the global population ages, more of us face frightening cognitive decline, personally or in our loved ones. There are over 10 million new cases of dementia globally each year.

But a study published this year suggests up to 13 percent of people diagnosed with dementia in the US may have a misdiagnosis and are instead left struggling with a condition that can be treated.

“Health care providers [must be] made aware of this potential overlap between dementia and hepatic encephalopathy, which is treatable,” said Virginia Commonwealth University hepatologist Jasmohan Bajaj in July.

Dec 22, 2024

Scientists discover 2 stars orbiting our galaxy’s supermassive black hole in lockstep — and they could point to a type of planet never seen before

Posted by in category: cosmology

Astronomers have discovered a pair of young stars near the supermassive black hole at the heart of our galaxy. Studying them can offer a rare glimpse into how stars can endure — at least briefly — the immense gravity exerted by such cosmic behemoths.

Dec 22, 2024

Scientists Bring Us Closer to a Real, Working Warp Drive

Posted by in category: space travel

A warp drive for faster-than-light travel may no longer need exotic matter.

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